1. Chatting at bar - John (hero) and his friend Bob sit at a bar and talk. John shares his dreams of owning a coffee shop with Bob. Bob's sad because his girlfriend broke up with him.
2. Rise and shine - John wakes up the next morning in bed and there's a few messages on his answering machine, he checks them and one of the messages is from his mother. She wants him to call because she is worried about him
3. Headlines - John drinks coffee in the kitchen and reads the morning paper. Headlines read "WHEN IT RAINS IT POURS - longest period of rain in over a century".
4. Shower - John showers and brushes his teeth.
5. Car - John in his car. His cars a pile of junk. He has trouble starting it.
6. Cubicle - John slugishly types away at his computer.
7. Lunch - John has lunch with Bob and Dillon at a hamburger joint and talk about how work sucks.
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The above is a silly example of what I call a scene outline.
It's the first thing I do when I am preparing a screenplay.
I don't include any dialogue.
Give each scene a number/bullet and a cool little title. It's easier to find them later when you're moving scenesaround.
AVOID using index cards like the plague! They were great "before" there were computers but now it doesn't make any sense to do. I'd rather cut and paste scenes on an outline than shuffle 60-100 index cards. If you want 'Productivity", throw the index cards in the trash (just my opinion).
If you have a great scene in mind but not sure where to put it, just get it down with the others.
After your done you can cut and paste the scenes to where they fit best.
Using this method is like acting like GOD. You can look down over your entire screenplay all at once.
Once your happy with how it all flows, open up Final Draft or Movie Magic and start writing.
What I LOVE to do is after I wrote a scene from the scene oultine into the screenplay is
BOLD that scene in the outline so that I know it's done. Once you have a bunch of scenes
bolded in the outline you will start to get excited because you can see your progress and how far along your coming.
If you get to a "boring" scene that you dread writing or you just are not sure what to write, skip it! I tend to save the boring scenes for last (It's called Island Hopping).
Before you attempt to write a scene outline practice doing it with one of your favorite movies. Here's a scene outline/study I wrote for the movie GoodFellas, to give you an idea of what they should look like.
I included some dialogue in this Goodfellas outline and the grammer/speling is terrible, as I was pausing and playing the movie as I wrote.
http://www.towniesmovie.com/goodfellas.rtf
(this file will be deleted within a month)
I highly recommend the scene outline method. Give it a try! Good luck.